The Top 100 Country Singles of the 2010s









One the reasons I started doing year-end single lists by genre on here in 2012 is that I wanted to zoom in on stuff I wasn't always listening to, including country. And it really did get me looking at the country charts every week and keeping a country station or two programmed on my car radio more consistently. I never did the snobby "I listen to everything except country" thing, but I never really heard country growing up so I came around to it, both the classics and the modern hits pretty gradually, but by the end of the decade I felt really ready to make this list. 

I already did an R&B list, and rap, pop and rock lists are still to come. Maybe I will go back and do a 2000s country list after that. Here's the Spotify playlist of every song here. 

1. Kacey Musgraves - "Merry Go ‘Round" (2013)
#10 Country Airplay, #63 Hot 100
I remember driving home from work late one night when a DJ on the local country station said they were gonna try out a new song. And from that first moment I heard “Merry Go 'Round,” and went straight home and listened to the other songs Musgraves had, I kinda knew she was gonna be a big deal on some level, whether or not it was on the country radio level. I'm still sometimes surprised how much Golden Hour grew her audience, though, and how many people love that album but don't necessary know "Merry Go 'Round" or Same Trailer Different Park

2. Lady A - “Need You Now” (2010)
#2 Hot 100, #1 Country Songs
It can be tricky to figure out where to list songs that sort of straddle two different years, even moreso when they straddle two different decades (for instance, Maren Morris's "The Bones" made a lot of chart impact in 2019, but it's gotten so much bigger recently that instead of putting it on this list, I'm going to save it for the 2020s list in ten years). "Need You Now" came out and broke through in 2009 but peaked on the charts in early 2010, and it arguably hasn't been topped by a bigger country crossover hit since then -- "Cruise" and "Body Like A Back Road" are the only ones that come close, and I don't think either quite got there. Lady Antebellum finally came to grips with their name being bad and became Lady A last month, I guess we'll see if it sticks. 

3. Eric Church - "Springsteen" (2012)
#1 Country Songs, #19 Hot 100
Eric Church has more songs on this list than any other artist, and his longtime collaborator Jay Joyce has more songs on this list than any other producer, and this was their biggest song and the one that made me an avid fan of Church. Trading on classic rock nostalgia was a big crutch for country music in the last decade, and "Springsteen" hits a couple obvious Bruce references while only vaguely summoning the sound of a wistful midtempo E Street tune, but that softly gleaming piano line and evocative lyric give Church a chance to do what he does best instead of simply creating a pastiche. 

4. Josh Turner - “Why Don’t We Just Dance” (2010) 
#1 Country Airplay, #35 Hot 100
Josh Turner is this tall handsome dude with an almost unbelievably deep voice, and I always figured he'd have become one of the biggest stars in country if he wasn't also devoutly religious and primarily made very stern and serious gospel country songs like "Long Black Train." Even his highest charting and most carefree single is an aw shucks wholesome song about moving the couch against the wall to cut a rug in the living room, but it has such a gentle charm and every piece of the tune clicks together beautifully.

5. Eli Young Band - "Even If It Breaks Your Heart" (2012)
#1 Country Songs, #29 Hot 100
The "write what you know" axiom ensures that there are a whole lot of songs about making music and the life of a musician, and a lot of them tend to strike me as kind of boring and indulgent, whether self-pitying or self-mythologizing. But Texas's Eli Young Band (Eli and Young being the last names of two members, not the first and last name of one member as I assumed for years) really nailed it as far as I'm concerned, all the hope and longing and beaut and anxiety that comes with dedicating any amount of your life to making music. Fittingly, "Even if It Breaks Your Heart" played over the opening scene of the TV series Nashville. 

6. Jon Pardi - "Dirt On My Boots" (2017)
#1 Country Airplay, #37 Hot 100
PardiNextDoor (not his actual nickname to anybody but me) locked down the boot-themed country song niche when he followed his breakthrough single "Head Over Boots" with the even bigger "Dirt On My Boots." But I think the part of Pardi's neotraditionalist vibe that I appreciated the most is how prominently the fiddle is mixed on California Sunrise

7. Midland - "Drinkin' Problem" (2017)
#3 Country Airplay, #45 Hot 100
One of the few band bands (as in playing instruments, not a vocal group) that broke through on country radio in the 2010s, Midland spiked their neotraditionalism with a little nudie suit retro glamor, appropriate for a band of showbiz lifers that includes a soap opera actor and a video directing buddy of Bruno Mars. And their debut single "Drinkin' Problem" was country's best ode to alcohol of the decade, tipping a hat to the dangers of addiction with the ambivalence and irreverence of a George Jones drinking song

8. Darius Rucker – “Wagon Wheel” (2013)
#1 Country Airplay, #15 Hot 100
Hootie & The Blowfish's biggest hit, "Only Wanna Be With You," was dotted with references to Bob Dylan's 1975 songs "Idiot Wind" and "Tangled Up In Blue." The band sent the song to Dylan's publisher when it was first release to no response, but once it became a massive hit, Dylan got a large out-of-court settlement from the band. Nearly 20 years later, Dylan was also part of the biggest hit of Darius Rucker's solo career, three albums into his reinvention as a country artist. Old Crow Medicine Show's most popular song, "Wagon Wheel," was essentially written around a song fragment that Dylan had sung on a widely bootlegged 1973 studio outtake, and once again Darius Rucker was the one that bottled it up and made it a big winning singalong for the pop charts. 

9. Little Big Town - "Pontoon" (2012)
#1 Country Songs, #22 Hot 100
Little Big Town's greatest asset will always be the quartet's four part harmonies, but every successful group with multiple vocalists will eventually figure out which voice really resonates with people. It took Little Big Town a while: in their first 10 years on the charts, they only had three top 10 country hits, each with a different lead singer or combination of lead singers. Then they kicked off their more successful second decade with their first Jay Joyce-produced single, and the reverb Joyce put on Karen Fairchild's vocal instantly brought out the star quality in her voice that would be on proinent display on most of their hits from that moment forward. 

10. Maren Morris - "My Church" (2016)
#9 Country Airplay, #50 Hot 100
"My Church" is another one of those songs that's burned into my memory for the first time I heard it, and instantly made a note of the artist and knew whatever album they were about to release was gonna be one of my favorites of the year. In a genre were actual Christianity competes with religious fervor for the music's stars and history, "My Church" managed to be a little sacrilegious while being so reverent about country that nobody was offended. Michael Busbee, Morris's co-writer and co-producer on "My Chuch" and most of her two major label albums, died of brain cancer last September at 43, a terrible loss for music. 

11. Luke Combs - "When It Rains It Pours" (2017)
#1 Country Airplay, #33 Hot 100
The old joke country songs are often a litany of personal misfortune (I lost my job, my wife left me, and my dog ran away, etc.) doesn't really apply to what country radio plays anymore. Fittingly, however the one song that did play off of that stereotype flipped it on its head entertainingly: the guy's girl leaves him, and it sets off a streak of good luck instead of bad luck. Luke "Puffy" Combs (not his actual nickname to anybody but me) has been on a historic the last few years, with his first 8 singles all going to #1 on country radio, and I have no idea how long it will continue, but "When It Rains It Pours" will always be my favorite from this run. 
























12. Miranda Lambert - “The House That Built Me” (2010) 
#1 Country Airplay, #28 Hot 100
One of only three country songs nominated for Song of the Year at the Grammys in the 2010s, "The House That Built Me" was a tearjerking instant classic, the crown jewel of Miranda Lambert's pretty impressive career. And she only heard the song because her fiance was about to record it, and thank god he let her have it, there's no way it would be as good as a Blake Shelton song. 

13. Brett Eldredge - "Don't Ya" (2013)
#1 Country Airplay, #30 Hot 100
Brett Eldredge released two singles at the beginning of his career that I didn't hear when they bounced around the lower reaches of the country charts. But the first time I heard "Don't Ya" on the radio was another one of those moments when I just knew instantly that this was someone I'd be hearing a lot from. He's got a lot more hits now, but he's never bent his deep resonant voice into as many catchy little riffs and runs as he does on this song. 

14. Maddie & Tae - "Girl In A Country Song" (2014)
#1 Country Airplay, #54 Hot 100
The defining legacy of mainstream country in the 2010s is, unfortunately, how much more male-dominated the charts and radio playlists became than they'dbeen in previous decades. It's still a huge issue -- there are 3 women in this week's country airplay top 10, which would be considered a good week by modern standards -- but it reached a tipping point about 5 years ago. "Bro country" was at its peak, Tomato-gate shook the whole radio industry, and two heretofore unknown teenage girls wrote the song that perfectly satirized teh whole situation with withering wit. 

15. Florida Georgia Line - "Dirt" (2014)
#1 Country Airplay, #11 Hot 100
Florida Georgia Line were the unapologetic poster boys for bro country, as lucrative and as loathed as Limp Bizkit were at their peak. But they've managed to survive the moment that defined them and become a career act with a relatively wide ranging sound. And that all started when the launched their second album with a song like "Dirt" that any number of artists would've been proud to release, instead of trying to remake "Cruise." 

16. Brothers Osborne - "Stay A Little Longer" (2015)
#8 Country Airplay, #65 Hot 100
I always assumed that Deale, Maryland siblings T.J. and John Osborne named their group the way they did out of deference to '60s bluegrass hitmakers The Osborne Brothers. But the musical template for Brothers Osborne really feels like The Allman Brothers Band, with John Osborne as the guitar hero who cuts loose on extended solos on the album version of "Stay A Little Longer," but still gets in some great licks on the radio single that chops off 90 seconds of the good stuff. 

17. Brad Paisley - “Water” (2010) 
#1 Country Airplay, #42 Hot 100
Brad Paisley started out the decade as mainstream country's resident hotshot guitarist, and had five country #1s in the 2010s -- not bad, but a clear step down from his ubiquity of the 2000s, when he topped the singles chart a dozen times. "Water" was the last of a string of 'noun' songs like "Alcohol" and "Ticks" where Paisley seemed to just start with a single word and riff on it entertainingly for a couple verses. It's such a simple, playful summer song that you barely even notice that almost half the track is instrumental, with Paisley ripping two guitar solos and leaving room for a nice fiddle section as well. 

18. Sugarland - “Stuck Like Glue” (2010) 
#2 Country Airplay, #17 Hot 100
The early 2010s were not a big time for country crossover -- other than "Need You Now" and Taylor, not much was scaling high on the Hot 100. But "Stuck Like Glue" broke big in that dry period, thanks to Jennifer Nettles, who gave the song the same manic conviction she later gave to 2019's funniest TV song, "Misbehavin'" from The Righteous Gemstones. 

19. Justin Moore - "You Look Like I Need A Drink" (2015)
#1 Country Airplay, #79 Hot 100
Justin Moore is kind of an underdog I find myself rooting for, a guy who's had a good run of hits -- "You Look LIke I Need A Drink" was the 5th of his 7 songs that have topped the country charts -- but hasn't really become a household name. Just a great vocalist, the kind of rich voice and charming drawl that reminds me of some of the best country singers, and can make a song like "Drink" feel like a short story unfurling with a melody. 

20. Tim McGraw - “Felt Good On My Lips” (2011) 
#1 Country Airplay, #26 Hot 100
One of the things I really changed my opinion on in the past 15 years or so of starting to follow country more actively is that Tim McGraw went from being someone I regarded as probably one of the best major artists to someone I roll my eyes at for having a dopey voice and mostly cheesy material. But "Felt Good On My Lips," the victory lap new song from his 4th greatest hits album, is the kind of big shameless pop song I might be disappointed to hear a lesser country artist sing, it's right at McGraw's level in the best way. 

21. Cam - "Burning House" (2015)
#6 Country Airplay, #48 Hot 100
One of my favorite things about country music that I've never researched to really find the origin of is the surprising appearance of the 7/8 time signature in slow songs and ballads. Cam's "Burning House," along with Blake Shelton's "Mine Would Be You," is one of my favorite hits of the last decade that had verses in 7/8 and choruses in 4/4. Cam hasn't released an album since Untamed, which featured "Burning House," and I really hope she gets a career resurgence, she writes some really interesting songs (and also released a great Christine And The Queens cover last year). 























22. Thomas Rhett - "Make Me Wanna" (2015)
#1 Country Airplay, #43 Hot 100
Thomas Rhett is a second generation country star (his father Rhett Akins, who had a string of successful singles in the ‘90s, has continued writing hits, including some of his son’s and the highest Jon Pardi and Blake Shelton songs on this list). And as one generation of singers gets older, Rhett stands as probably the biggest male country star under 40, at least until someone Luke Combs or Kane Brown catches up to his 15 chart-toppers. "Make Me Wanna" is far from the most famous of his hits, but it's always been my favorite, riding a lithe Bee Gees-inspired groove but still identifiably country. 

23. The Band Perry - "Better Dig Two" (2013)
#1 Country Airplay, #28 Hot 100
The Band Perry's big breakout hit "If I Die Young" was an earnest sentimental song about mortality, but they returned to launch their second album with a song that centered on death in a more morbidly funny way. Still, I was surprised when The Band Perry kind of fell off the country map and never made a third album, finally resurfacing a couple years ago with an experimental Rick Rubin-produced electronic EP. 

24. Taylor Swift - “Back To December” (2010) 
#3 Country Airplay, #6 Hot 100
It's weird to look back on 2010s Taylor Swift, 1 and a half albums of country and 3 and a half albums of pop. I don't think she'll ever totally return to the genre that made her a star, which is a shame, because I think she has more good songs like "Back To December" in her while the pop stuff already feels like it's running out of steam. 

25. Dierks Bentley - "Drunk On A Plane" (2014)
#1 Country Airplay, #27 Hot 100
A song with the title "Drunk On A Plane" could've been a full bore bro country party anthem, but Dierks Bentley opted to spin a little yarn and set the scene with a little heartbreak, so that once the big silly chorus gets going, there's that little bittersweet pathos that really makes the song more charming than it has a right to be.  

26.Jason Aldean f/ Kelly Clarkson - “Don’t You Wanna Stay” (2011) 
#1 Country Airplay, #31 Hot 100
Kelly Clarkson is a great country singer in addition to being a great pop singer, and I'm a little annoyed that the American Idol from Texas hasn't just given in and made a full-on country album. But I'll take these occasional duets and detours if that's all she wants to do. 

27. Thompson Square - “Are You Gonna Kiss Me Or Not” (2011) 
#1 Country Airplay, #32 Hot 100
There are so many country songs like this, where the context leading up to the chorus changes each time, and the last time you get to something like a wedding or a funeral. And it gets me every time, especially this one. It's sappy, but it works. 

28. Eric Church - “Drink In My Hand” (2011) 
#1 Country Airplay, #40 Hot 100
The overwhelming majority of Eric Church's biggest hits are the delicate, thoughtful midtempo tracks, and a lot of his harder edged singles got ignored by country radio (or even crossed over a little to rock radio, like "The Outsider"). The exception is "Drink In My Hand," his first #1 and still his signature rocker. 

29. Toby Keith - "Beers Ago" (2012)
#6 Country Songs, #52 Hot 100
Toby Keith will always get more derision from non-country fans than the average country star, and I suppose it's justified to an extent. But man, he really had a fantastic run of singles, for a good 15 years the hits just poured out of him. As that run started to come to an end in the early 2010s, he released so many alcohol-themed singles in a row ("Red Solo Cup," "Beers Ago," "I Like Girls That Drink Beer," "Hope On The Rocks," and "Drinks After Work") that it started to feel like a weird cry for help. Good songs, though. 

30. Kane Brown - "Good As You" (2019) 
#1 Country Airplay, #36 Hot 100
Kane Brown is the country star I'd put money on being the most likely to thrive throughout the 2020s, and part of that is because he's someone who's not afraid to put a drum machine on a track or collaborate with people like Khalid and Marshmello. But mostly it's because when he steps away from all that stuff and just does a twangy ballad like "Good As You," it sounds fantastic. 

31. Sam Hunt - "House Party" (2015)
#1 Country Airplay, #26 Hot 100
At one point not too long ago, Sam Hunt would have seemed the best bet to become country's commercial future. But then he kinda disappeared for a while, and finally delivered his second album recently, 5 years after the first, losing a lot of momentum in the process. That's fine with me, since I always rolled my eyes at the Drake-ish talk-singing tracks that made him an avatar of hip progressive country, but I at least found "House Party" pretty irresistible. 

32. Blake Shelton - “Honey Bee” (2011) 
#1 Country Airplay, #13 Hot 100
In the weeks after Blake Shelton released "Honey Bee," he married Miranda Lambert and began his run as one of the celebrity coaches on NBC's The Voice -- very quickly, this guy who'd been plugging along for a decade as a minor star would become a household name on primetime TV and half of country's new power couple. So "Honey Bee" probably would've become by far his biggest hit at the time even if it wasn't one of his best songs, but it absolutely is. 

33. Kenny Chesney - "Til It's Gone" (2014)
#5 Country Airplay, #73 Hot 100
Like all the big country superstars of the 2000s, Kenny Chesney isn't as big as he used to be, but he's the one that's stayed closest to the top of the heap. He's had over a dozen #1 songs in the last decade, and just last month he beat Drake out on the Billboard 200 to tie Garth Brooks for the country artist with the most #1 albums. "Til It's Gone" was a relatively minor hit for him, but I thought it was a career high point, great majestic arena rock sound with an interesting structure where the last minute of the song was this leisurely decrescendo. 



























34. Little Big Town - "Girl Crush" (2015)
#3 Country Airplay, #18 Hot 100
The response to "Girl Crush" played out so strangely -- it's not actually a song about same-sex attraction, but the lyric teased that possibility enough that some country listeners and radio programmers objected to the song. And, a little like "Old Town Road" a few years later, the news coverage of the controversy and the subsequent counter-backlash fueled the song's huge success as it became the biggest hit of Little Big Town's career, and the second-biggest country song of 2015. It's a good song, but it was definitely a bit odd when it got performed at award shows as if it was an important progressive moment for LGBTQ causes when it's more like a classy "I Kissed A Girl" than anything else. 

35. Lee Brice - "A Woman Like You" (2012)
#1 Country Songs, #33 Hot 100
An incredibly mawkish, schmaltzy, sentimental song, that I am enough of a sappy old married person to enjoy. 

36. Carly Pearce - "Every Little Thing" (2017)
#1 Country Airplay, #50 Hot 100

Another beautiful production from the late Michael Busbee, so brooding and haunted and textured and vulnerable that I was a little surprised that it carried a new artist to #1

37. Thomas Rhett - "Marry Me" (2018) 
#1 Country Airplay, #30 Hot 100
The first 66 seconds of "Marry Me" are a textbook schmaltzy country ballad. And then, Thomas Rhett nonchalantly deploys the lyric's big twist, and carries on with the rest of the song without breaking the mood. It's absolutely brilliant, particularly when it would've been so easy for him to just do another blissful wife guy song like "Die A Happy Man" 

38. Jimmie Allen - "Best Shot" (2018) 
#1 Country Airplay, #46 Hot 100
A lot of my memories of hearing country music when I was younger are from the 10 years when I lived in Delaware. So I've always really rooted for Jimmie Allen, not just as one of the few Black singers on the country charts but as a guy from Sussex County, Delaware who went to high school not far from where I did, just a few years after me. There was a decent pop remix of "Best Shot" but the original country version is definitely the best. 

39. Chris Stapleton - "Broken Halos" (2018) 
#1 Country Airplay, #45 Hot 100 
Chris Stapleton is a big bearded southern rocker who became a darling of Nashville after writing hits for more clean cut stars like Kenny Chesney and Luke Bryan. And a few months after his 2015 solo debut Traveller was released to great reviews and modest sales, the CMA Awards became a coronation when he swept the major awards and the album rocketed to #1 and he's been headlining arenas ever since. Still, it was almost 3 years before country radio found a Stapleton song to really get behind, and it didn't top the airplay chart until after it'd already won a Grammy. But "Broken Halos" is a gorgeous song, I'm glad it became the big one. 

40. Luke Combs - "Beer Never Broke My Heart" (2019) 
#1 Country Airplay, #21 Hot 100
When Luke Combs showed up a couple years ago, another big bearded guy with a raspy voice, I regarded him as kind of a more accessible Chris Stapleton. And he's kind of justified that impression with his huge run of singles, some of which were a little too mawkish and MOR for me. But he's great at big boisterous anthems, and I never tired of hearing "Beer Ne

41. Eric Church - "Record Year" (2016)
#1 Country Airplay, #44 Hot 100
Another Eric Church song that sees emotions through the prism of music, but with way more references than "Springsteen" so I was able to make a whole playlist of the music he tips a hat to in "Record Year." 

42. Darius Rucker - "For The First Time" (2018) 
#1 Country Airplay, #58 Hot 100
Hootie & The Blowfish always had a country vibe to me even when they first got played primarily on rock radio, so there was a sense of inevitability about Darius Rucker's solo success as a country act. But I like that he'll still work a reference to R.E.M. into one of his bigger singles. 

43. Montgomery Gentry - "Where I Come From" (2012)
#8 Country Songs, #71 Hot 100
Montgomery Gentry, co-led by '90s country star John Michael Montgomery's big brother Eddie, had a pretty good string of rowdy anthemic singles in the 2000s. And "Where I Come From" was the last notable one from that run, with a big rousing chorus that ends with"Nobody's gonna call the cops where I come from!" And then, in 2017, Montgomery Gentry came to a tragic end when Troy Gentry died in a helicopter crash, flying when he could've taken a car much like Stevie Ray Vaughan and Kobe Bryant. Celebrities: stay away from helicopters! It's not worth it. 

44. Taylor Swift - "Red" (2013)
#8 Country Airplay. #6 Hot 100

"Red" was the end of an era, the last Taylor Swift single promoted to country radio, one of her few co-writes with Dann Huff, who had a hand in a ton of songs on this list. She's dipped her toe into country radio on occasion (writing a Little Big Town hit, singing backup on a Sugarland single, and an unsuccessful radio campaign for "New Year's Day"), but nothing major, and "Red" is still one of my favorite songs she's ever made. 

45. Rascal Flatts - "Yours If You Want It" (2017)
#1 Country Airplay, #71 Hot 100
It kinda felt like Rascal Flatts spent the 2010s walking peacefully into the sunset, releasing little of consequence, and announcing a farewell tour this year that they ultimately canceled because of COVID-19. But "Yours If You Want It," their final #1 if they really do disband, was a pretty damn good one to go out on. And a few months ago there was a video of a rapper in a ski mask singing two of the big Rascal Flatts hits from the 2000s, so who knows what weirdness the future holds for them. 

46. Dan + Shay - "Speechless" (2019)  
#1 Country Airplay, #24 Hot 100
Scott Hendricks, Dan Smyers
Dan + Shay, one half of whom is former pop singer Shay Mooney who was once signed to T-Pain's Nappy Boy Entertainment, remind me a lot of Rascal Flatts. And like Rascal Flatts, I find them irritating the majority of the time, and very occasionally find their harmonies and schmaltzy songs irresistible. And I thought "Speechless" was by far the best of their run of huge crossover hits that also included "Tequila" and "10,000 Hours" with Justin Bieber. 

47. Jake Owen - “The One That Got Away” (2012)
#1 Country Airplay, #51 Hot 100
I love the way "The One That Got Away" starts, that acoustic guitar strummed so hard it's almost clipping. And I love the way it ends, with the song's opening couplet sung one more time, a little softer and more wistfully. The song in between those two moments is pretty great too. 

48. Carrie Underwood - "Southbound" (2019)  
#3 Country Airplay, #64 Hot 100
In the decade that women got pushed off country playlists, Carrie Underwood reigned as one of the few women who was still a sure thing, but I didn't think she did much that was as memorable as the early hits after she won American Idol. But "Southbound" was just pitch perfect, one of the few country summer anthems in recent memory that felt musically distinct enough that I didn't mind the familiar lyrical tropes. 

49. Brad Paisley - "Southern Comfort Zone" (2013)
#2 Country Airplay, #54 Hot 100
"Southern Comfort Zone" was the rare Brad Paisley song I hated when I first heard it, I think I just found all the little clips of stuff like "The Andy Griffith Show" kind of cloying. But it grew on me big time, I love the way it just builds and builds and builds over 5 minutes and hits all these perfect little sentimental notes over that insistent backbeat. 

50. Keith Urban f/ Miranda Lambert - "We Were Us" (2013)
#1 Country Airplay, #26 Hot 100
Keith Urban has a lot of good singles, there were a lot of songs I could've put on this list that just weren't quite as memorable as his 2000s hits. But his song with Miranda Lambert really stuck with me, it doesn't feel like a hyped up superstar duet but it's easily one of the best songs of the decade where two country singers found the perfect middle point between their respective sensibilities. 




































51. Maren Morris - "I Could Use A Love Song" (2017)
52. Eric Church - "Give Me Back My Hometown" (2014)
53. Jon Pardi - "Head Over Boots" (2016)
54. Gary Allan - "Every Storm (Runs Out Of Rain)" (2013)
55. The Band Perry - "DONE." (2013)
56. Kelsea Ballerini - "Peter Pan" (2016)
57. Justin Moore - "Point At You" (2013)
58. Little Big Town - "Day Drinking" (2014)
59. Thomas Rhett - "Die A Happy Man" (2016)
60. Zac Brown Band - "Keep Me In Mind" (2012)
61. Luke Bryan - “Rain Is A Good Thing” (2010) 
62. Florida Georgia Line f/ The Backstreet Boys - "God, Your Mama, And Me" (2017)
63. Hunter Hayes - "I Want Crazy" (2013)
64. Ashley McBryde - "A Little Dive Bar In Dahlonega" (2018) 
65. Jana Kramer - "Why Ya Wanna" (2012)
66. Casey James - "Crying On A Suitcase" (2012)
67. Jason Aldean - "You Make It Easy" (2018) 
68. Keith Urban f/ Julia Michaels - "Coming Home"
(2018)  
69. Eric Church f/ Rhiannon Giddens - "Kill A Word" (2017)
70. Travis Denning - "David Ashley Parker From Powder Springs" (2018)  
71. Carly Pearce - "Hide The Wine" (2018) 
72. The Band Perry - "Don't Let Me Be Lonely" (2014)
73. Justin Moore - "Til My Last Day" (2012)
74. Carrie Underwood – “Undo It” (2010)
75. Brad Paisley featuring Alabama - “Old Alabama” (2011) 
76. Brothers Osborne - "Shoot Me Straight" (2018)  
77. George Strait - "Give It All We Got Tonight" (2013)
78. Eli Young Band - "Dust" (2014)
79. Miranda Lambert - "Automatic" (2014)
80. Brett Eldredge - "Beat of the Music" (2014)
81. Keith Urban - "Somewhere In My Car"
(2014)
82. Jason Aldean - "When She Says Baby"
(2014)
83. Eric Church - "Some Of It" (2019)  
84. The Band Perry - “If I Die Young” (2010) 
85. Luke Bryan - "Knockin' Boots" (2019)  
86. Thomas Rhett - "Sixteen" (2019)
87. Maren Morris - "'80s Mercedes" (2016)
88. Blake Shelton f/ Gwen Sebastian - "My Eyes" (2014)
89. Parmalee - "Already Callin' You Mine" (2015)
90. Eric Church - "Talladega" (2015)
91. Dierks Bentley f/ Elle King - "Different For Girls" (2016)
92. Old Dominion - "Snapback" (2016)
93. Brandy Clark - "Girl Next Door" (2016)
94. Midland - "Burn Out" (2018)  
95. Thomas Rhett - "Star Of The Show" (2017)
96. Dan + Shay - "How Not To" (2017)
97. Justin Moore - "Kinda Don't Care" (2017)
98. Jason Aldean - "Any Ol' Barstool” (2017)
99. Morgan Wallen f/ Florida Georgia Line - "Up Down" (2018)   
100. Chris Stapleton - "Nobody To Blame" (2015)
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